Towards a social determination of health framework for understanding climate disruption and health‐disease processes DOI Creative Commons
José E. Hasemann Lara, Alejandra Díaz de León,

Deniz Daser

и другие.

Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Год журнала: 2024, Номер 38(3), С. 313 - 327

Опубликована: Май 22, 2024

Abstract We compare the social determinants of health (SDOH) and determination (SDET) from school Latin American Social Medicine/Collective Health. Whereas SDET acknowledges how capitalist rule continues to shape global structures public concerns, SDOH proffers neoliberal solutions that obscure much violence dispossession influence contemporary migration health‐disease experiences. Working in simultaneous ethnographic teams, researchers here interviewed Honduran migrants their respective sites Honduras, Mexico, United States. These interlocutors connected experiences disaster lack economic resources political corruption. Accordingly, we provide an elucidation liberal dehumanizing foundations by relying on theorizations Africana philosophy argue model better captures intersecting historical inequalities structure relationships between climate, health‐disease, violence.

Язык: Английский

Climate-Health Risk (In)visibility in the Context of Everyday Humanitarian Practice DOI
John Doering‐White,

Alejandra Díaz de León,

Arisbeth Hernández Tapia

и другие.

Social Science & Medicine, Год журнала: 2024, Номер 354, С. 117081 - 117081

Опубликована: Июнь 29, 2024

Язык: Английский

Процитировано

2

Towards a social determination of health framework for understanding climate disruption and health‐disease processes DOI Creative Commons
José E. Hasemann Lara, Alejandra Díaz de León,

Deniz Daser

и другие.

Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Год журнала: 2024, Номер 38(3), С. 313 - 327

Опубликована: Май 22, 2024

Abstract We compare the social determinants of health (SDOH) and determination (SDET) from school Latin American Social Medicine/Collective Health. Whereas SDET acknowledges how capitalist rule continues to shape global structures public concerns, SDOH proffers neoliberal solutions that obscure much violence dispossession influence contemporary migration health‐disease experiences. Working in simultaneous ethnographic teams, researchers here interviewed Honduran migrants their respective sites Honduras, Mexico, United States. These interlocutors connected experiences disaster lack economic resources political corruption. Accordingly, we provide an elucidation liberal dehumanizing foundations by relying on theorizations Africana philosophy argue model better captures intersecting historical inequalities structure relationships between climate, health‐disease, violence.

Язык: Английский

Процитировано

1